As a premed student.. this is a kinda ridiculous affirmation. The only other way to stop bedwetting would be the use of a foley cath on the kid, which would be against any medical ethic since there's a) an easier, risk free alternative (diapers) and b) a high risk of infections involving the catheter.

Sounds really made up.

Besides, the desire you are talking about is one that develops only at a very young age and once you reach infancy, it can only be triggered, not created.

As a premed student.. this is a kinda ridiculous affirmation. The only other way to stop bedwetting would be the use of a foley cath on the kid, which would be against any medical ethic since there's a) an easier, risk free alternative (diapers) and b) a high risk of infections involving the catheter.

There is also, Bedwetting alarms, anti-diuretics and some antidepressants that can help for bedwetting (wikipedia: I know it's not too reliable but the research seams to be OK)

Lot of people don't want to wear them so the doctors are going to try to find solutions for the problem before they take that step with their patient. No one goes into the office and says what their bladder problem is and then ask for diapers unless they have a fetish. Instead they go in and tell them about it hoping they can fix it so they wouldn't have to wear them anymore. I think the only time they would ask for them is if their problem is so bad, they can't even go to the bathroom because they don't know when they need to go and even they tried the bathroom schedule and it didn't work so they took that step by wearing diapers but they still don't like wearing them. But it can get expensive to having to keep buying them so of course some might want a prescription for them until their problem is fixed.